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ASBS 03/15 I NO. 36 

July/August/September 

Germany 6,90 € 

Europe 8J0€ 
International US-$ 11,00 (RRP) 

ISSN 2192-3892 


4 



198937 



206902 



Q TUTORIALS | ARTISTS | SCENE | MATERIALS Q Exclusive Download Center for Readers: www.airbrush-magazine.net 


PAINTING T-SHIRTS 

Summer's coming! 



ASIAN STYLE 

Helmet Painting 

FANTASY K 
ILLUSTRATION 

Mickey Mouse I Mythologic Ferryman 



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I 


EDITORIAL 


Hour usual shade 
of caziness 


CONTENT 


STEP BY STEP 


What an exciting three months it's been since our last 
issue came out. The International Airbrush Days 2015 in 
Hamburg, Germany demanded a lot of time and effort 
from the ASBS editorial staff. But it was all well worth it: 
We kicked off the month of May with three unforgetta- 
ble days together with over 80 participants and lecturers 
from 14 nations. The best pictures of the event are part 
of this issue. 


Nonetheless, we've naturally not cut back on finishing our 
next issue of this magazine. Thankfully, when it comes 
to planning out this magazine, we can depend on our 
trustworthy Step by Step authors who always send us 
their contributions in good time. This was also the case for 
Gerald Mendez despite travel stress and European tours, 
who made his incredible "Mickey Runaway Brain" article 
available to us. We are honored to be able to release a 
Disney motif, which normally is subject to very strict copy- 
right and usage right restrictions. Admittedly, the artists 
sometimes have to wait quite a bit of time until their 
contributions are published - as was the case for e.g. Rob 
van Dijk and Pradeesh Raman with their portfolios or 
even Ariel Castellaro, whose David Bowie portrait is some- 
thing feel is just outstanding. It's actually unforgivable 
that we've got rearrange such lovely contributions for the 
sake of a lack of space, current issues or even just to strive 
for the "perfect mixture". But this is unfortunately what 
editorial life is like! 


In as much as it's possible, we do try and adjust ourselves 
to the season of the year. That's why we've sought out 
the T-shirt Steps by Step from Diego Baubinas for this 
issue as it's just perfect to start off the summer. Surely 
you'll like the many other exciting topics in this magazine 
such as the helmet painting from Lies Maria Wilhelm, the 
Ferryman by Sarah Richter, and the new portion of the 
ASBS series "Roger Hassler's Texture Effects" on the sub- 
ject of water drops. 

We are excited about everything that's going to happen in 
the next three months - you'll find out all about it! 


Your ASBS Team 



Lunch with friends: 
Dru, Craig, Uwe and Silvia. 


Ready: Snapshot shortly before 
Gerald's departure. 


04 Mickey Runaway Brain 

Disney Illustration 

Mickey Mouse as an airbrushing maniac: 

Gerald Mendez plays with effect stencils. 

Candy paints and Disney characters. 

14 strawberry Tongue 

Airbrushing T-Shirts 

Alluring: Argentinian Diego Baubinas designs 
the strawberry tongue on a T-Shirt. 

26 David Bowie 

Portrait on T-Shirt 

This is not just for David Bowie followers: Ariel 
Castellaro shows an amazing black and white 
portrait with a „color spot". 

42 The Way of the Warrior 

Airbrush on Helmet 

Lies Maria Wilhelm traces the way of the Samurai 
and is decorating a motor bike helmet with cherry 
blossoms, characters and warriors. 

56 The Ferryman 

Illustration on Cardboard 

German Sarah Richter imagines a hellride to 

beyond with the ferryman Charon. 


BASICS 


51 Water Drops 

Roger Hassler show simple masking techniques 
to render water drops for different designs. 


PORTFOLIO 


11 Rob van Dijk 

Very productive: Dutchmen Rob van Dijk renders 
two new artworks per month - just as a hobby! 

54 Pradeesh Raman 

Oriental airbrush art from India. 


CLASSICS 

22 

Airbrush News 

From Thayer & Chandler, Molotow and others! 

36 

Readers' Gallery 

Men, Monsters and Motors! 

64 

Scene /Events 

International Airbrush Days rock! 

69 

Shopping Guide 

Let's go shopping! 

70 

Preview 

The Beauties and the Beasts... 


03/1 5 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


3 






'/////// STEP BY STEP | Mickey Runaway Brain 


Level 



miickey 

.... r(unaway Brain 

Disney is his life. For many years, Gerald Oscar served as the template for this illustra- 
Mendez - originally from Mexico - has been tion, in which Gerald has equipped Mickey 
working in the Walt Disney dream factory. No with an airbrush and in embedded him in a fas- 
wonder that the motifs and stories continue cinating background made of sprays of color, 
to inspire him also in his airbrushing studio. Gerald makes use of Candy effects and a capable 
The short film "Mickey Runaway Brain", which balance out of white and black hues, 
came out in 1995 and was nominated for an 


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AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 



Mickey Runaway Brain | STEP BY STEP 


A 


EQUIPMENT - Mickey Runaway Brain 


Airbrushes: Iwata CM-Q Iwata Kustom-CM, Iwata HP-CH, 
Iwata Eclipse HP-CS, Iwata Eclipse HP-BCS, Anest Iwata 
LPH-80 

Paint: House of Kolor Black and White basecoat color 
paints, House of Kolor Intensifier Kandy Koncentrate 
colors, House of Kolor Intercoat Clear SG-100, House of 
Kolor Urethane Clear Coat UC35. 


Surface: 18" x 24" Aluminum Panel 

Additional Tools & Materials: Ultra Mask Artool Masking 
Film, Long Term masking tape, 36"x42" Cutting Matt, Xac- 
to Knife with #11 blades, 1000 grit sand paper. Tracing pa- 
per, ^"Calligraphy Marker, Gerald Mendez's Splatter FX'^'^ 
Sets Freehand template from Artool®, Apple computer 
with Adobe Photoshop CS software, Wacom Cintiq 24HD. 



Reference 

I To start this project I de- 
signed a concept and layout consid- 
ering the use of my Artool template 
Splatter FX, taking advantage of the 
black background color and the main 
subject, Mickey as a Runaway Brain 
holding an Iwata Airbrush. What a 
perfect combination! Once I created 
this composition, I printed a clean 
line art to use it as my main stencil of 
the project, by cutting the contour of 
it on top of a transfer tape, so that 
way ril have two silhouettes, one 
on paper and one as a mask, both in 
the same cut. I placed the image over 
my black aluminum base and spray a 
very light mist of white around the 
silhouette. 


Masking Mickey 

Knowing the placement of the image, I covered the black areas of 
the character with the precut mask to block these areas from overspray. 




White Splatter 

J With the black parts of Mick- 
ey's body covered, I can spray white 
in the surrounding areas to define 
the character's shape using my Artool 
Splatter FX template. Note that I cov- 


03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


5 








'V///// STEP BY STEP | Mickey Runaway Brain 




f\A Masking the Background 

With the white splatter back- 
ground and the character shape de- 
fined, I placed the precut paper mask 
to know the exact location of Mickey 
and to be able to mask the surround 
area. 


Mickey's Face 

At this point I masked the white splatter, using my precut transfer tape 
and protecting the rest of the panel from over spray with mask brown paper. Ex- 
posing only the white areas of the character and using my precut line art sheet, I 
sprayed the edges of the face, teeth, eyes and hands, with a diluted black paint 
only to separate these areas, before I freehand the shades. Once the separation 
lines are defined, I start doing freehand shading to create volume and depth. 


6 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 






Mickey Runaway Brain | STEP BY STEP //////A^ 




The Airbrush 

w w Exposing the airbrush, I add 
separation lines to it. To create volume 
and depth, I am doing some freehand 
shading again. I also add further details 
and textures such as vertical grooves in 
the teeth and small vains in the eyes. 
I add a chrome look to the airbrush by 
creating reflections and hatching at 
the valves and threads. 



Drop shadows 

M After all the shading has been 
sprayed with a soft blended shades, 
the mask has been removed, and I 
concentrate in create drop shadows 
where necessary to give the illusion 
of having the character on top of the 
white splatter, also I spray a new black 
splatters on top of some of the white 
areas to give a better balance and con- 
trast. 



Ears and Body 

Now I removed the masked 
black areas exposing the ears, head 
and body of Mickey to spray some 
white highlights on key points to 
give definition to the whole charac- 
ter. Then a very light mist of diluted 
white paint has been sprayed on top 
of the background and accents have 
been added with black splatters on 
top to give some depth to the back- 
ground. 


03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


7 





'/////// STEP BY STEP | Mickey Runaway Brain 


^ A Black and White Balance 

The interesting part of this 
design is to integrate some of the 
black areas of the character with the 
black background. The idea is to be 
able to read in full the rendering, but 
at the same time have it blended with 
the background as an element of de- 
sign, mixing the positive and negative 
splatters in the whole composition. 




^ ^ Masking for Color 

I w The next step is to add color to it, so I must mask all the white areas on 
the character with my precut transfer tap. Note that some sections of the mask 
have been secured with additional tape to assure full protection of the mask. 


^ ^ Coloring the Background 

I I House of Kolor Kandy Apple 
Red has been prepared by mixing it with 
SG-100 Intercoat Clear to add adhesion 
to the transparent intensifier. Til take 
advantage of the black areas spraying 
the transparent paint over the whole 
panel integrating the dark tones and 
highlights and to give color to the white 
splatters. The center area of the back- 
ground has been sprayed with Tanger- 
ine Kandy Concentrate to enhance and 
give some depth. 




12 


Coloring Mickey 

A light mist of House of Kolor Candy Tangerine and Apple Red has been 
sprayed to the shades on the face, teeth, eyes and hands. The airbrush and the 
saliva on the mouth get a very light mist touch of Candy Oriental Blue. The hose 
of the airbrush has been masked and rendered, along with final highlights and 
details to ensure the right look on the rendering. 


13 


Intercoat Clearing 

At this point the main illus- 
tration is ready for clear coating to 
give protection to the artwork before 
the final touches of lettering and pin- 
striping. 


8 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 








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'/////// STEP BY STEP | Mickey Runaway Brain 



^ A Lettering 

I After seen the cool effect 
and personality of the final image, I 
decide to incorporate some lettering 
with the name of my business: Aero- 
grafika Art Studio. I designed a letter- 
ing with a touch of Graffiti Style, after 
of many trial and error sketches made 
with marker I get the final rough con- 
cept, and then finalizing the lettering 
design digitally including some drips 
to match the splatter design. 



15 Spraying Letters 


The lettering was masked on top of the artwork already protected 
with few coats of clear. Using transfer tape I carefully cut the letters and drips. 
A silver base was sprayed followed by silver metal flake, to give an extra 
sparkles and sheen to the lettering. A blending coat of Candy Tangerine and 
Apple Red gives the final color to it. 


16 


Pinstriping and Finish 

Before the final clear coat and 
polish I let the Pinstriper to go around 
the lettering and do final accents to en- 
hance the piece. 



GERALD MENDEZ 


Gerald Mendez was born in Mexico City. All his life he was introduced to different aspects of art, 
because of his father, who was an architectural model maker and also loved art. After his graphic 
design education Gerald Mendez moved to Southern California where he undertook the chal- 
lenge to master as many painting techniques as possible to improve the quality of his work, in- 
cluding professional airbrushing and digital illustration. Today, Gerald has made a successful life 
in the US through his artwork. He operates his own studio called "Aerografika Art Studio" and he 
is currently working as a senior designer and illustrator for Walt Disney Co. Furthermore he keeps 
very busy as a creative automotive airbrush artist. Gerald has developed his own personal style, 
e.g. the combination of the human form and fantasy landscapes, what he calls "Surreal Dreams". 

6 ) www.aerografika.com 


10 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 








3IJK 


^ I 

//Residence: 

I live in Duiven (near Arnheim) in the Netherlands. 

//How I became an airbrush artist: 

I always did some drawing and then in 2010, I was 
watching TV and saw how an airbrusher painted a motor- 
cycle. That really fascinated me. I then participated in a 
short seminar in Almere and that's how it began. In 2011, 
I absolved a workshop with Dru Blair when he visited 
Lion-Art in Goes, where I was able to improve my tech- 
nique. In 2013, my wife sponsored a course for me with 
Marissa Oosterlee at the studio from Peter Evers in Raves- 
tein. I learned a lot there! 

//This is what I like to paint the most: 

Everything actually! I try out various topics all the time - 
from abstract to Classic Cars, from animals to glamorous 
portraits. But if I had to choose, then it's Classic Cars and 
animals. 




DO YOU KNOW. . . 


03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


11 




PORTFOLIO I Rob van Dijk 



//What inspires me: good bit though. I never really keep track of the time. 

Nature and technology inspire me the most. I create about two pictures per month. 


//These are my templates: 

Tm always trying to use my own photos as a reference. I 
also get pictures from friends, who then say I won't be 
able to brush this or that - but I've always won that 
challenge up to now! And naturally I find pictures online. 

//For an airbrush picture, I need... 

... an average of roughly 15 hours, I think. This varies a 


//You can see my work here: 

I have a website: www. Airbrushrob.nl. In addition. I'm 
currently searching for exhibition space. And I'll natu- 
rally be exhibiting my work at "The Fantasy World of 
Airbrush" on August 15 th/i 5 th jp Grefrath, Germany as 
well as in January in Rosmalen, Holland. 



12 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 



Rob van Dijk | PORTFOLIO 


/ 




Not only for collectors! 

//Airbrush Art Magazine 

The airbrush magazine of 
the 90s and 2000s! 

■ Artist profiles ■ Gallery 

■ Step by Steps ■ Tips & tricks 

In English, Italian, German 
and French! 

Bargain-sale now at the ASBS online store: 

www.airbrush-books.com 







The alluring strawberry tongue has recently be- Diego Baubinas has accepted this challenge 
come a popular painting and composing motive and is establishing this artwork with patient 
and can perfectly be used on T-Shirts. Argentinian stencil work. 


14 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 


EQUIPMENT - Strowberry tongue 


Airbrushes: Iwata Revolution CR 0.5 mm, Iwata CM-B 

Paints: Acrylic airbrush paints (red, yellow, blue, white, 
and black) 


Surface: 100% cotton white t-shirt, color printer, regular 
printer, white paper 

Other materials: Low tack masking tape, cutting mat, 
X-Acto blade, iron 



Designing stencils 

I Print several copies of the 
reference in real size to use on the 
painting process. They will be cut in 
different shapes to use them as free 
hand shields during the process. I 
use this method to avoid the use of 
graphite paper and pencils, because 
I will use bright colors and the black 
guidelines would otherwise show 
through, ruining the final result. I 
choose paper to make a freehand 
shield, because I will only use them 
once and paper is easy to cut with 
the scalpel. But if you want to paint 
several copies, you can cut them in 
plastic sheets. The cutting processes 
are a little harder, but you can re-use 
them a lot. 


I T-shirt preparation 

^/^liLay the t-shirt flat on a table and place the printed reference in 
place. With a pencil, I poke a point through the paper to leave a mark of 
the corners on the image. This is very important, because you can distort the 
t-shirt surface when you stretch it on the board for painting. This can 
become very noticeable in a rectangular image and ruin the final result. 
Stretch the t-shirt on the board and make sure that the four pencil marks keep 
the rectangle shape, thus matching the reference. Spray a layer of reduced 
extender (acrylic transparent base) on this area and iron it using wax paper 
between the iron and the t-shirt to avoid the iron to get stuck. This base will 
smooth down the t-shirt surface, reducing the lint and easing the painting 
process. 


I Frame and mask painting area 

^/Jluse low-tack masking tape to frame the rectangular area where 
the paint goes and cover the rest of the t-shirt with paper to protect it 
from overspray. Working on a white t-shirt, you want to avoid overspray. 
This is very important, because you can't get rid of it easily like you can with 
a black t-shirt, because the blue shift of the white paint. Overspray will kill 
the professional sharp look of your painting. Take one real size printed 
reference, place it in the cutting mat and use the scalpel to cut the inline and 
the outline of the lips and the tongue, but do not go too far. You need to 
leave everything in one piece to keep the shapes correct. 



03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


15 




•0 


sf 


STEP BY STEP | Strawberry tongue 


f\A I Lip contours 

I Put the stencil in place. You 
can use repositionable adhesive spray 
to free both hands or just hold it 
manually. Fold the area of the lips 
and spray straight red as a subtle mist. 
We just want to lay the main lines to 
work freehand. Add a couple more 
coats onto the darker section of the 
lips as well as the interior and exte- 
rior lines and the bridge of the upper 
lip fading toward the interior section. 
Do not paint the entire surface with 
the same intensity or we will not be 
achieving the correct shapes that we 
need to get the realistic 3D effect. 
Fold the tongue section and spray a 
soft mist just onto the tip area so as to 
limit the background, but not the rest, 
or else you'll lose the border of the 
lips. 




Background 

To paint the background, mix red and yellow to get an orange col- 
or and add some drops of white to turn it into more of a peach color. The 
drops of white will make our paint opaque and as such, we'll have an easier 
time to get an even coverage. Use the stencil to avoid overspray in the teeth 
section. Don't worry if you overlay a little on the outside line of the lips. A 
soft edge will add realism to our work. Create a couple more layers under 
the lower lip so as to leave a strong base where you'll next be able to paint 
the shadow color. 


^/^#ITo create shadow color mix- 
ture, add a drop of blue and of red 
to the already created peach color to 
obtain a brownish shadowy color. 
Spray this color under the lower lip 
and be careful to leave a gap between 
the lip and the shadow. This point is 
where our secondary light hits the 
mouth, thus adding dimension. Use 
stencils to protect the lip, if necessary, 
but not for the shadow. The only hard 
edge is in the border of the lip with 
the shadow. The rest of the edges of 
the shadow tend to blend towards the 
skin tone. 



16 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 




«! 


S^rawberry tongue | STEP BY STEP //////A 


' Lip texture 

, start detailing the lower lip, which is less complex and will give 
you the confidence you need to paint the other. Take the dark red and start 
painting the main vertical lines so as to define the bigger grooves in the 
lip texture. Then add a lot more thin wiggly vertical lines. Do not paint 
the entire length of the lip. Check the reference and copy the main look of 
the texture. Create some short wiggly horizontal lines following the curve 
of the lip, but only in the darkest areas. Do not overwork on the highlights. 
Paint a soft layer on the darker areas to reestablish the shapes. 




I layer of texture 

wOlTake some of the dark red 
paint that you previously mixed and 
add some drops of blue to get an even 
darker red, almost purple, color. Load 
the purple with blue and work on the 
second layer of texture using the same 
method that we used with the dark 
red. Only work in the darker areas of 
the lip to gain depth in the texture. 
Place a soft layer in the darkest parts 
so as to add some more dimension.At 
this point, the texture may look too 
dark, but that's OK. Highlights will 
give a wet look and add some realism. 
It adds to the rest of the dimension. 



Highlights 

I Taking a closer look, we can 
see that highlight color is not a pure 
white. As such, load up on white and 
add a drop of red to mix a very sub- 
tle pink (this will kill the blue shift a 
bit as well). Highlights have hard edg- 
es, so we will use the stencil to paint 
them. Take the printed image and cut 
the bright areas of the lip. Put it in 
place and then spray the subtle pink 
in a soft layer. We want it transpar- 
ent so as not to kill the texture un- 
derneath. Make random little dots on 
the lower section where needed. Use 
lip color to blend the highlights with 
the lip's texture and complete the 
effect. 


03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


17 





A I Upper lip 

Iw llhe upper lip has a different 
shape than the lower lip. It's also has 
a dark section in the lower section 
where you can see the reflection of 
the teeth. This is also the main differ- 
ence and is very important to make 
it look correct and realistic. To paint 
the upper lip, use the same color and 
technique that you used on the lower 
lip. To border this with the tongue 
and teeth, cut a mask and affix it 
with low tack tape to protect those 
areas. Begin work with the dark red 
to establish the main wrinkles. Load 
the dark purple-red and paint the sec- 
ond layer of textures. Save the area 
where the highlights will be, especial- 
ly where the reflection of the teeth 
needs to be seen. Use the stencil to 
paint the highlights the same color 
and with the same technique as be- 
fore. 



^ ^ I Tongue 

I I I To paint the tongue, mix red 
with a couple of drops of yellow. We 
are aiming for a different red than the 
red of the lips, kind of a brighter, slight- 
ly more orange version of red. Take a 
printed image and cut out the tongue 
to use the rest as a shield, protecting 
the finished lips and the teeth section. 
Paint it flat. We will give add dimension 
later with a darker color. Load the lip 
color (dark red) and paint the shadows 
to add the shapes from the outline fad- 
ing inward and toward the sides in the 
center so as to add the center trough. 



1 ^ 1 

I I Strawberry seeds -or achenes 
to put it biologically correct - have 
hard edges, so it will look better if we 
use stencil again. Cut a printed tongue 
and remove all the achenes with the 
scalpel. Load yellow and add some 
drops of white to make an opaque yel- 
low that can be seen over the tongue 
color. Place the achenes stencil over 
the tongue and spray the opaque 
yellow. You can flip the stencil to 
check the opacity of the color, but 
don't remove it yet. We need it in 



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AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 





the exact same place for the next col- 
or. Add a drop of red to the mix to 
get an opaque orange and carefully 
spray it on the lower section of ev- 
ery achene. This will give dimension, 
avoiding the look of yellow spots on 
the tongue. 


^ ^ Reflexions of the tongue 

I J Take another printed picture of a tongue and use the scalpel to cut 
the tongue's wet shines. I know this is a lot of work, but it will be worth the 
effort to paint them. Load the slightly pink white that we used earlier to 




paint the lips highlights. These high- 
lights are a lot more subtle, so in 
this case, just spray a very soft layer 
through the stencil. To improve the 
look even more, add texture to the 
wet spots using the stippling tech- 
nique to avoid the flat look of the 
highlights. 



1 ^ I 

I I Use carbon paper to transfer 
the teeth highlight shapes into mask- 
ing tape. Cut it and stick it to the t- 
shirt in the right place. This will pre- 
serve the white of the fabric that will 
be the highlight color. Mix a shadow 
color for the teeth and gums with a 
drop of purple and black, but extreme- 
ly over-reduced. Cut a printed image 
and use it to lay the main straight lines 
of the teeth and gums, then remove 
it and add dimension to the teeth (do 
not remove the masking tape of the 
highlights yet). 


03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


19 







JfV// STEP BY STEP I Strawbert^ tongue 




L- 



^ |r I Buccal cavity 

I ^ I Mask the lips and teeth to spray the dark inner color of the mouth. 
Don't use straight black. This would decrease the realism. Instead of that, mix a 
drop of black with the purple red to make a deep dark purple. Spray onto the 
void and the left side of the tongue as well as on the border of the lower lip, 
fading towards the tongue. 


1 I F**^*shecl T-Shirt 

I w I The t-shirt is done. As a protective measure for long-lasting images, I 
seal the image at the end of the work, but this step is optional. To seal it, I spray 
extender all over it and iron it using wax paper in between to avoid the iron 
from getting stuck. This also adds some glaze, which I feel makes it look better. 
Put it on, impress your friends, and enjoy! 



Diego Javier Baubinas was born in 
Berisso, Buenos Aires, Argentina 
in 1973, where he still lives to this 
very day. He started his artistic ca- 
reer in what he calls the field of 
"Techno-art", working on extreme 
thematic creations and the modi- 
fication of computers, peripherals, 
and electronic artifacts, conducting 
tutorials and participating in a pub- 
lication for a computer magazine, 
public events, and work orders for 
hardware companies. When he first 
bought an airbrush, he was aiming 
to improve the quality of his tech- 
no-art works, but this exceptional 
tool and art form captivated him 
completely and changed his career 
forever. After that, he learned the 
basics of airbrushing on his own and 
then started to take courses to learn 
advanced techniques. Up to now, 
most of his work has been based 
on illustrations aimed towards re- 
alism on all kinds of surfaces from 
vehicles to t-shirts to canvas, and 
paper, etc. 

Q www.facebook.com/DJBAerografias 




20 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 




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• Superior fine-line detail performance with subtil 

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• Durable and lightfast perfect for use as automcm^ ^^MB^^W 

• Ready to spray out of bottle 
• May be reduced in any ratio for preferred 

Highest performing white and airbrush colors on 




AIRBRUSHNEWS 


EQUIPMENT 



The Multifaceted Work Animal: The Thayer & Chandler Vega 1500 


The Thayer & Chand- 
ler Vega 1500 Vega is 
a double-action gravity 
flow system with 0.5 mm plug- 
in nozzle and a paint cup with 7 ml 
capacity. The device is produced by 
the American company Badger, but 
just like with its sibling models Vega 
600, 1000, and 2000, distributed 
by the traditional brand Thayer & 
Chandler. Since 1891, Thayer & Chan- 
dler have been counted amongst 
the first manufacturers of airbrush 
devices and were stationed in Chi- 
cago until their cessation in 1998 - 
just like Badger Airbrush founded 
in 1963. In 2000, Thayer & Chandler 


were purchased by Bad- 
ger. The Vega 1500 is de- 
livered in an acrylic box 
with an assembly key 
for the suction 
cap, a black cap 
for the gravity 

flow cup and a pipette for fill- 
ing paints. With the installed 
0.5 mm nozzle, a large range of 
paint sorts can be processed. Whe- 
ther ink, classic airbrush acrylic 
paint or liquid T-shirt paint, the 
Vega 1 500 can work with everything. 
As a result, the areas of application 
for the device are widely dispersed. 
From model construction to face 


painting and nail art to custom 
painting, the device does well for 
itself in many disciplines. 



Technical information: The Thayer & Chandler Vega 1500 

System: 

Double-action gravity flow system 

Nozzle system: 

Plug-in nozzle system 

Needle: 

Polished 

Paint cup: 

7 ml 

Processing: 

No deficiencies 

Operating trigger: 

Plate-shaped with grooves 

Needle protective cap: 

No jet-stream 

Paint amount regulation: 

No 

Hose connection: 

Badger-individual connector 

Solvent-resistant: 

Yes 

Weight: 

72 grams 

Accessories: 

Key for suction cap, hood, pipette 

Price for needle/nozzle: 

app. 8.50/6.50 EUR 

SRP: 

136.72 Euro/135.90 EUR 


Despite the really large 


^ nozzle, the spray picture 
is pleasantly fine such that 
even details can be sprayed on with 
it. As with other Thayer & Chandler 
Airbrushes, the Vega 1500 is deliv- 
ered with a red aluminum handle 
piece. As a result, the device is really 
quite light with 72 grams and can be 
held nicely in the hand. The trigger 
is pretty large and features a circu- 
lar button. The device is excellently 
processed and the paint cup can be 
easily cleaned. The needle protective 
cap is closed (not jet stream). This has 
the practical advantage that your 
finger can be placed up front on the 
needle protective cap and the paint 
can "bubble" for mixing. 

The Vega 1500 has a recommended 
sales price of 136.72 EUR, 135.90 USD. 

o www.badgerairbrush.com 
Q www.intl-trade.eu 


ACCESSORIES 

Createx Yupo Airbrush Paper: The Synthetic All-Purpose Surface 



The Createx Yupo Airbrush Paper is 
a special synthetic paper with all- 
round characteristics. The subsurface 
is ideally suitable for extreme mixing 
techniques: Erasing and scratching at 
paints is one of the strengths of this 
painting surface, but it's also possible 
to combine various painting mediums 
e.g. pencils, pens, markers or aquarel- 
le paints. Createx Yupo airbrush paper 
is made out of 100% polypropylene, 
is tear-resistant, watertight, and can 


even be used as a template material 
for reusable stencils. The special pa- 
per weighs 200 g/m^ and is availab- 
le in three various sizes a 15 sheets. 
Yupo Airbrush Paper is available in 
sizes 32 x 22.5 cm, 45 x 32 cm, and 
65 X 45 cm. Prices vary between 12.74 
EUR and 41.25 EUR. 

Q www.createx.de 
Q www.yupo.com 


22 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/1 5 E 





AIRBRUSHNEWS 


ACCESSORIES 


Marissa FX Color: 

Optimized for Portraits and 
Fantasy Motifs 



When designing photorealistic portraits and fanta- 
sy motifs, the demands on the paints that are to be 
used are particularly high. As such, the expert in this 
field, namely Dutch artist and ASBS author Maris- 
sa Oosterlee, has taken this challenge into her own 
hands. Together with the American company ETAC 
Color Concepts, she has created the Marissa FX Co- 
lors paint series. The paints can be used directly from 
the bottle or diluted with water, so as to be able to 
spray them with even less pressure and to finely 
work on details. The Marissa FX paints dry very 
quickly and can be excellently erased and scraped. A 
specialty is that they can be loosened up again with 
fluid - an ideal characteristic for additional effects. 
The paint holds on drawing board, canvas, but also 
on primed metal surfaces and other hard surfaces. It 
can also be sealed with a solvent containing protec- 
tive varnish. Marissa FX Colors are available in 28 co- 
lor hues in 30 ml bottle sizes for 7.50 EUR and 60 ml 
for 11.50 EUR. The basic colors are also available in 
120 ml for 21.50 EUR. Above and beyond this, there 
are different sets: The Primary Set and the Skin Co- 
lor Set each consist of 6 color hues starting at 45 EUR 
(each 30 ml). With the additional transparent me- 
dium "Reduce Air" for 6.95 EUR, the paints can be 
made transparent without making them too fluid. The 
individual color hues and sets can be exclusively 
ordered right at the online shop from Marissa Ooster- 
lee. 

o www.foxystudio.com 


AIRBRUSH 

STEP BY STEP 

THE MAGAZINE FOR ALL AIRBRUSH ARTISTS 


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03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


23 




AIRBRUSHNEWS 


ACCESSORIES 

Secret Tip for Fine Art Artists: Pebeo Artist Acrylics Liquid 


Pebeo Artist Acrylics Liquid is a pig- 
mented acrylic drawing ink that was 
especially developed for airbrushing 
and graphic tools such as drawing pen 
or graphic designer brush. The paint 
has been on the market for a while 
now, but was recently enhanced to 
establish a better spray capability and 
better adhesiveness. The pigmenta- 
tion was increased once again as well. 
Even without being diluted, the paint 
displays a wonderful flow behavior 
and a very soft spray picture, since 
it's very fluid and the pigments are 
very fine-grained. The Pebeo Artist 
Acrylics can also be correspondingly 
erased very easily and scraped away 


properly with a scalpel. This is how 
additional texture effects and de- 
tails can be realized. The Pebeo Artist 
Acrylics are strongest on airbrush pa- 
per and drawing board, but also can 
be used free of problem on other 


ft t • * ft 

'ill 



surfaces. There are 26 color hues in 
the 45 ml bottle and 5 basic hues in 
the 250 ml reservoir bottle. The 45 ml 
bottles have an integrated, removable 
paint pipette. With that, you can also 
count drops when needed. With the 
exception of white, gray, and Nepal 
yellow, all of the color hues are trans- 
parent. 

45 ml Pebeo Artist Acrylics Liquid cost 
app. 8.50 EUR. The reservoir bottles are 
available as of app. 24.99 EUR. 

o www.pebeo.com 


Placing Ideas on Paper: Molotow Basic Sketcher 



After the great success enjoyed by 
the One4AII-Marker from spray can 
manufacturer Molotow, the com- 
pany is now bringing a new series of 
markers onto the market: The Basic 
Sketchers. The twin markers are es- 
pecially designed for drafting layout 
sketches and disposes of a 1 mm fine 
tip on the one side and a 2-6 mm 
wide tip on the other. The marker 
is filled with high-value ink on an 
alcohol basis and with that, is very 
odorless. There are 120 individual 
color hues and a row of paint sets, 
each with 12 pens. With the op- 


tionally available colorless Basic 
Sketcher Blender, you can add a soft 
color shift after the first color ap- 
plication. In comparison with other 
traditional markers of this type, the 
Molotow Basic Sketcher is a real deal 
at 2.50 EUR per unit. The sets are 
available for 27.50 EUR. The Basic 
Sketchers are available at specialty 
retail shops or directly from the 
manufacturer. 

Q www.molotow.com 


Hahnemuhle Lanavanguard - The Revolutionary All-Round Painting Surface 



For many airbrush motifs, an artist 
wants to find a painting surface that is 
highly white and on which you can do 
anything the technique allows: Brush- 


es, scratches, scrapes, erasing etc., 
without destroying the surface. The 
synthetic paper Lanavanguard from 
Hahnemuhle meets just about every 
requirement for a perfect surface in 
order to realize motifs in extreme mix- 
ing techniques. 

You can start with pencils or markers, 
then spray it over with an airbrush, and 
finally scrape away paint with the scal- 
pel. The paper is suitable for both wet- 
in-wet techniques and with oil and 
acrylic as well as for works with col- 


ored pencils and markers. The 200 g/m^ 
heavy paper always remains flat and 
even in the painting process, is abso- 
lutely imperishable and tear-proof. 

Lanavanguard is available in blocks 
featuring 10 sheets sized 22 x 32 cm 
and 34 x 48 cm. The blocks cost app. 
11 or 23 EUR. As sheet material, the 
painting surface is available in masses 
50 X 70 cm in units of 5 sheets at a 
price of app. 24 EUR. 

Q www.hahnemuehle.com 


24 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/1 5 E 





AIRBRUSHNEWS 


ACCESSORIES 


Saral Paper for small Usages 


There are many techniques to transfer 
motifs from a reference to the paint- 
ing surface. One of the simplest is 
using Saral paper. The colored, wax- 
free transfer paper can be erased, can 
be washed, and can be used numer- 
ous times. Up to now, Saral paper was 
available as a roll of 0.30 x 3.6 m - 
too much for irregular users and at a 
price of almost 20 EUR / 13 USD also 
too expensive. As such, the manufac- 
turer now also offers new packaging 
units, each featuring 5 DIN A4 sheets. 
These packages are each available 


in the 5 different sorts of Saral, thus 
graphite, white, red, blue, and yel- 
low. Above and beyond this, there is 
a sampler with one sheet of each sort, 
a Decorative Crafts Kit with white, 
yellow, and graphite sheets as well as 
the Stained Glass Kit with yellow and 
graphite paper, especially for use on 
glass. The practical sets are available 
in artist material retail shops for app. 
5 EUR/ 5 USD. 

o www.saralpaper.com 



SPECIAL TOOLS 


New Yiynova Tablet Monitors 



In issue 04/14, we introduced the price- 
worthy Tablet Monitors from Yiynova, 
with which airbrush templates can be 
designed even more easily and pre- 
cisely right on your PC. For many read- 
ers, we encountered a good bit of in- 
terest. Now Yiynova is putting out a 
more compact and a larger device with 
the MVP 10 UHD and 22 U+ IPS (v3) re- 
spectively, both available for incredibly 
affordable prices. 

The Yiynova MVP 10 UHD is really quite 
small at a size 10 inches. With a resolu- 
tion of 1280 X 800 pixels, there are a 
sufficient amount of pixels available to 
establish e.g. even Photoshop with its 
tool pallets. The accompanying pencil 
must be equipped with an AAA battery 
before you begin using it. The tablet 
has 2048 pressure levels and the pen- 
cil requires only 5 grams of pressure 
to draw a line in a visible manner. The 
device can be operated on a Mac and 



via a Windows system. What's special 
about an MVP 10 UHD is that you only 
need a connection cable on the device 
and two USB entry points on the per- 
sonal computer. This is the case, be- 
cause both the control signals and the 
video signal is determined by USB. That 
often saves troublesome and unyield- 
ing video cable and most especially, 
space. Eight functional buttons that are 
located on the left edge can be used 
individually in the driver settings and 
allow for a quick workflow. By clap- 
ping open the pedestals, you can place 
it in an upright position, at a slant or 
completely flat. With 730 grams net 
weight, it is very light. 

In addition to a DVI-I connection, the 
Yiynova 22U+ IPS (v3) offers 2048 pres- 
sure levels and a full HD resolution 
(1920 X 1080 pixels) and thus primar- 
ily a large and comfortable work sur- 
face of 22 inches. The function buttons 



are located centrally at 22U+ on the 
monitor edge and can be operated 
by individual commands. To ensure 
that the 22U-i- can be operated on any 
graphic card connection, even 3 adapt- 
ers are delivered for the usual inter- 
faces. As with the smaller brothers, the 
two accompanying pencils react very 
finely with the lightest of pressure. The 
somewhat mirroring glossy surface of 
the display shows natural colors and 
covers 94% of the sRGB color space. 
With the attached pedestal, you can 
adjust the angle of the display in any 
number of levels. 


The Yiynova 10 UHD is available for 399 
EUR and the Yiynova 22U+ IPS (v3) is 
available for 898.99 EUR, both directly 
from the manufacturer. 

Q www.yiynova.eu 


03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


25 





Have you ever given any thought to what the the textile white-on-black piece of work prec- 
light and shadow effects on (your) facial wrin- isely underlines the character with its many 
kies look like? For Argentinian Ariel Castellaro, details and the entire life experience of the 
this altercation is an important prerequisite for currently 68 year old pop idol. Just like in real- 
the creation of his David Bowie portrait on a ity, his different eye colors immediately draw 
T-shirt. It was worth the effort, seeing as how the attention of the viewer. 


26 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/1 5 E 



David Bowie | STEP BY STEP 


/ 



EQUIPMENT - David Bowie 

Airbrushes: Sparmax SP 35 

Paints: Castellaro Multisurface: White, turquoise, olive green, and black 

(all being opaque), transparent medium, retarder 

Surface: Black T-shirt 

Photo template 

I I enlarge a copy of my design to the desired size. For this, I use two 
A3 sheets and attach them together with tape. Otherwise, I establish a print 
on photo paper, which I use as a photo template, then taking an additional 
color photo to always be able to check on the eye color. I attach the enlarged 
picture with tape onto the T-shirt and make sure that I correctly position it. In 
this case, I position it at a rather high location, because Til want to use parts 
of the throat bunching. I then take white transfer paper as it is used in the 
textile industry. I place this between the template and the T-shirt. 



Pre-drawing 

I now draw on some guidelines with a pen. I look for areas that are 
rich in contrast, because well need to take forms seriously at these areas. I 
try not to make any long continnous lines, but rather to transfer the texture 
and the characteristics of the face. I always have to pay attention to making sure 
that I draw strong lines where there are extreme light spots. To indicate that there 
are diffuse shadows, I press down with my pen in a more careful manner or draw 
dashed lines. 




Lighting situations 

Before beginning with the painting, I analyze the source of light in the 
photo. While doing this, I can orientate myself on e.g. the highlights in the eyes, 
the lighting areas on the nose, and the shadow's direction. Afterwards, I deter- 
mine what type of light we'll be dealing with. If the shadows have ambiguous 
edges, then we're dealing with diffuse light. If the shadows have sharp edges, 
then this is a sign of direct light. 


03/1 5 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


27 







'/////// STEP BY STEP | David Bowie 



f\/l Areas that are rich in contrast 

With this knowledge, I look for the sharpest edges that are the most 
rich in contrast in the photo. There, a very light tone meets a very dark one. 
This is the case e.g. between the iris and the white of the eyes. At this point, I 
begin my work with the lightest tone. I work with the airbrush at a distance 
from the painting surface of only 2 to 3 mm and barely move the trigger so as 
to get thin, soft lines. With the first stroke of the brush, I never apply all too 
much paint, but rather work with very light, transparent strokes. As such, I can 
always correct errors when painting. I take the time with every stroke that's 
necessary. 


AC Right eye 

I apply white to the edges of 
the eyelids where the glance can be 
seen on the photo. In addition, I paint 
the white edge of the eyes and that 
of the iris. I spray several layers to get 
the white degree that I require. I leave 
some color on the areas on which I 
want to continue working later. I take 
a step back to now apply a soft layer of 
color. The final tone should be a mid- 
range gray. On this thin layer, I expand 
on the area with some more white so 
as to create volume. That helps me to 
define forms such as e.g. those on the 
shadows and lights of the eyelids. 




06 


Iris 


To paint the iris, I go so close 
to the T-shirt that I am only about one 
millimeter away and slowly add some 
color to it. While doing this, I leave 
enough time to establish a very intense 
tone. In this way, I spray the texture 
in the interior of the iris and for this, 
I use my color photo template. In the 
lightest areas, I add a few more lay- 
ers by moving my airbrush very slowly. 
This lightness will show up again in the 
eyes or the bridge of the nose, because 
both these areas are receiving direct 
light. I always need to keep a scale 
of the intensity of white in my head. 
That is very important. I also paint ar- 
eas around the left eye and begin with 
the tear sac, because here - as with the 
highlights - we have the lightest points 
in the photo. I work at a distance of 
1 to 3 millimeters. I then continue to 
work on the textures of the eyelids and 
the eyebrows, but at this point I am a 
bit closer to the painting surface. 



28 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 






David Bowie | STEP BY STEP //////A 



Wrinkles 

# To create those wrinkles un- 
der the eyes, I draw very fine and pale 
lines. For this, I hardly move the trig- 
ger at all. I vary my distance back and 
forth between 3 and 5 millimeters. I 
usually start designing textures with 
a good bit of distance from the shirt. 
I then move in closer to create more 
unexpected or unplanned textures. 
When I get closer, I reduce the amount 
of paint being sprayed. To work out a 
texture, you have to understand how 
the light is falling on the forms. 



Nasolabial groove 

wO I go to the next area upon 
which there are some clear borders in 
contrast. In this case, I take the naso- 
labial groove, which diagonally leads 
from the nose to the corners of the 
mouth. Since the light is coming from 
the upper right, the surface to the 
right of the nose is more strongly ex- 
posed to the light than every other. 
On the right side of the mouth, I es- 
tablish a pretty large texture with a 
distance of 7 to 10 centimeters to the 
painting surface. I then overspray the 
entire area with a light paint spray 
to embed elements. 



OQ 

I paint the lips by beginning 
with the areas with the strongest con- 
trasts. I design the general forms of the 
cracks and wrinkles, their direction, 
and how the light falls upon them. I 
have the reflection in the background, 
one that comes from below, and allows 
me to add texture to the shaded part 
of the upper lip. 


03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


29 





'/////// STEP BY STEP | David Bowie 



^ ^ Left side 

I I I begin to paint the left side 
of the face and start working with 
little texture. Afterwards, in the fol- 
lowing layers, I add additional smaller 
and controlled texture elements, em- 
phasizing the illuminated points. 


10 


Chin 


I now turn to the lighted, or illuminated if you will, portion of the chin 
and paint it with a soft texture like the one in Photo 7. 1 paint the white hair in the 
beard one after the other, like I see it in the reference. I only work at a distance of 
one millimeter and do this very slowly. While doing this, I make sure that I always 
move in the same direction of growth and pay attention to the various lengths of 
hair so that it appears realistic. 



^ ^ Left eye 

I I paint the left eye as was al- 
ready described in Step 06. I do how- 
ever take into consideration that this 
side is lighter. As such, the total tex- 
ture is richer in contrast. 



^ Q Forehead 

I J On the forehead, I work with 
a soft texture by spraying on long, 
thin, transparent lines. I add them to 
the left side of the forehead and de- 
sign the curves as I see them in the 
photo. There are wrinkles in the skin 
that follow the form of the skeleton. 
Since the light is coming from above 
and from the right, I intensify the light- 
est areas of the wrinkles just below 
the forehead (see the graphic "types 
of folds" in Step 08). Carefully and in 
several layers, I fill the entire portion 
from the forehead to the hair on the 
right side. 



30 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 







David Bowie I STEP BY STEP 


/ 

/ 



Hair 

I In order to be able to paint 
the hair, I work from a mid-range dis- 
tance and with little color so as to de- 
sign the strains of hair. I observe them 
as surfaces, more or less in white. With 
finer and more defined lines, I paint 
over them with a shorter distance from 
the painting surface. I add some indi- 
vidual hairs to that and try to imitate 
the form and movement that I see in 
the photo. 



^ |r Shadows on the left eye 

I ^ I now begin with the shadow 
tones. With very thin lines, just a lit- 
tle paint, and a minor distance, I get 
around the edges of the iris, then go 
towards the inside and get the texture 
to stick out. I use this shadow color 
to take away some of the intensity of 
the white at these spots where it's too 
light and illuminated. I paint crossed 
lines under the eye and enhance small, 
strengthened shadows to give the tex- 
ture on the nose and under the eyes 
volume. I slowly add contour to the 
eyelashes so that the T-shirt material 
takes in lots of paint, and then work 
on the details of the tear sacs. 




Shadows on 
the right eye 


I do the same with the right eye, but 
the light is more intensive on this side. 
Thus, I must work on the details with 
little paint and transparent soft lines 
and not much distance. It is also im- 
portant to allow the paint to dry a few 
minutes and then to work highlights 
into the same area to get a more in- 
tensive tone. I develop the eyebrow 
hairs very slowly, just like I did with the 
eyelashes. I do the painting more than 
once to get the dark paint and defini- 
tion. 


03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


31 




'/////// STEP BY STEP | David Bowie 


^ ^ Cheeks 

I # I work on the texture of the 
cheeks. This time, I work on deepening 
everything, since I am working with 
the shadows. I do this very precisely 
and design the facial attributes that I 
see in the photo. 


^ O Chin textures 

I Now come textures on the 
chin, around the beard, and below the 
lips. For the finest of pores, I hold the 
airbrush at one point for a longer pe- 
riod of time and spray a little color. I 
then go to the next point, etc. You will 
need to work here in a very fine and 
precise manner in order to establish 
what you see on the photo as well as 
possible. Black points that are too large 
certainly wouldn't look good there! 



1 Q color & eyelashes 

I ^ I use 2 drops of olive green 
and 2 drops of a transparent medium 
so that I get a transparent mixture. 
With that, I color the right eye. I repeat 
the same thing on the left eye with 
two drops of turquoise and two drops 
of a transparent medium. I then fill 
pure black into my pistol and paint the 
upper eyelashes, one after the other. 
While doing this, I follow their direc- 
tion to a T as per the photo. I do the 
same thing with the lower eyelashes. I 
then paint the black pupils. 



Strains of hair 

I then spray the strains of hair 
and paint in some very fine lines, which 
stretch from the shady area to the eye- 
lids. This gives the hair texture. With 
some very slow, thin strokes, I imitate 
the loose hair. They can look very re- 
alistic when the form and amount fit 
together. 



32 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 





David Bowie | STEP BY STEP //////A 


^ ^ Deepen the shading 

I I paint in the shade in the lips and the nose. The most intensive shad- 
ows should always be located within the shading in the previous layer. I now 
sharpen the edges of your face. In this case, the area is located outside of the 
focus and isn't sharp. I have to take denote my distance from the painting 
surface to achieve the desired soft outbound edge. The same thing happens 




with the throat where the edge almost 
disappears. I then carefully bring out 
the darkest area with the same tone 
such as e.g. some lines on the wrinkles, 
skin spots, hair, etc. 



^ ^ Adding highlights 

Taking the source of light into 
consideration, I add some pure white 
with a higher level of pressure, rough- 
ly 3.1 bar (45 PSI). I'll try to optimize 
the light areas and begin working on 
the eyes and eyelids. In doing this. I'll 
paint below the darker lines to achieve 
a deepening effect. On bigger surfaces, 
I keep adding the white wherever it 
counters the shade, like onto the moist 
areas of the eyes, the eyelids, and the 
tear sacs. I then spend more time with 
the reflections in the eyes to get a very 
intensive white. It's the whitest spot 
in the whole picture. Afterwards, I color 
the white eyebrow hairs. 


^ 3 Light areas 

I work on the illuminated texture areas at various junctures of the face. 
With a bit of white paint, I bring out all of the areas upon which the light is 
directly shining. This is how I complete the light side of the texture. 




03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


33 




'/////// STEP BY STEP | David Bowie 



Beard 

With lots of patience, I paint 
the hairs of the beard one after an- 
other. The hair is short, irregular, and 
heading out in all different directions 
without any plan or design. Here you 
have to avoid working too evenly. 



25 


Hair 


I now also add some white highlights to the hair on the head where the 
light has the strongest effect. I spray the hairs that are not in the focus from a 
greater distance. 


26 


Finished 

To concluded, all I have to do 
is sign my work. It's done now. 



ARIEL CASTELLARO 

Already as a child, Argentinian Ariel Castellaro - born in Buenos Aires - was brought into 
the world of art by his grandmother, who was herself an oil painter. In 1995, he began 
painting models with airbrushes and soon switched over to painting T-shirts. In 1997, 
he began selling his works to clothing stores. In 1998, he took an intensive course on free- 
hand techniques so as to then work in the airbrush shop of a shopping mall. He then lat- 
er opened his own shop. Nowadays, he offers regular classes for up to 25 people. He is 
a member of the Argentinian Airbrush Association (APA), which continually organizes 
competitions and events with a variety of participants and a good bit of public interest. 
He's currently working on motorcycle and hot rod car projects. He's also planning to head 
some seminars in Europe. 

Q www.castellaroairbrush.com Q www.facebook.com/ariel.castellaro 


34 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 






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The New 

ARISM MINI 


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Artworks 

Paint supply is all safe for the upcoming artworks of Marina Aschbrenner, 
Stefan RosI and Roland Kernhof: They are the winners of the Pebeo Artist Acryl- 
ics paint sets that have been raffled with the last issue. Congratulations! You'd 
also like to fill up your studio supplies? Then take part in our new raffle and win 
an exclusive art supplies surprise kit with lots of useful stuff for your painting 
passion. Just submit your artwork until August 15, 2015. See further require- 
ments below. Good luck! 




1-1 

reader s GALLERY 

Brush & Win 



Rob van Dijk: Chevrolet Impala 

Airbrush: Iwata Micron SB and Pencil 
Paint: Etac Marissa 
Base: Canvas 


Rainer Schongarth: Self-portrait 

Airbrush: Infinity 
Paint: Schmincke Aero Color 
Base: Schoellershammer 4G, 
51x72 cm 



©HOW DO I ENTER? 


Simply send photos of your artworks - 

digital and at least 9 x 13 cm, with 
300 dpi resolution - to: info@airbrush- 
magazin.de or mail (also min. 9 x 13 cm 
prints) to: newart media & design, 
Wandsbeker Konigstr. 50, 22041 Ham- 
burg, Germany. Photos sent by mail 
cannot be returned. 

Please make sure that you have the per- 
sonal, as well as intellectual property 
rights at your disposal. 

Notice: Airbrush Step by Step does not 
take any responsibility for misuse of 
personal or intellectual property rights 
asso-ciated with the pictures and mo- 
tifs presented. All of the published 
works have been sent into the maga- 
zine voluntarily and the artists received 
no monetary compensation for them. 
Airbrush Step by Step decides on the 
choice of motifs based on purely aes- 
thetic and publishing aspects. There 
is no guarantee of entries being pub- 
lished. 


36 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/1 5 E 






READERS' GALLERY 





Georg Szloszjar: Earkobold 

Airbrush: Iwata CM-B, Infinity 
Paint: Schmincke Aero Color 
Base: Paper, 29,7x42 cm, 
www.szloszjar.com 


Jorg Bufe: Predator 

Airbrush: Iwata Kustom 
Paint: Createx Wicked 
Base: Motorcycle helmet 


03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


37 




READERS' GALLERY 



Carmen Stahl: Harley Davidson 

Airbrush: Iwata Micron CM-SB 
Paint: Schmincke Aero Color 
Base: Schoellershammer, 
50x70cm 


Jorg Keller: Rollergirl 

Airbrush: with 0.2 mm nozzle 
Paint: Acrylics 
Base: Gypsum plasterboard 


Thomas Ernst: Espresso 
Airbrush: Iwata HP-C, Evolution 2-in-1 
Paint: Schmincke Aero Color Professional 
Base: Schoellershammer 4G, 50x70 cm 
www.AirbrushThomas.de 



38 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/1 5 E 



READERS' GALLERY 




Rico Pahlig: Men's coffee table 

Airbrush: Iwata Custom Micron 
Paint: Schmincke, Etac 
Base: Schoellershammer, 
50x35cm 

www.aloha-airbrush.de 


Andreas Werner: 
To enjoy 

Paint: Schmincke 
Base: Schoellershammer 4G, 
ca. 70x50cm 
www.airbrushstudio-andy.de 




Rever Eveillee: Daydreaming 
Airbrush: Paasche VLS 
Paint: Hansa and Schmincke 
Base: Wooden board, 

70x100 cm 


Beatrix Brosch: VW Kafer 
Airbrush: Evolution 0.2 mm 
Paint: Pro Color 
Base: Car 


03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


39 




READERS' GALLERY 



Erik Smeets: Bela Lugosi 

Airbrush: Iwata HP/Micron 
Paint: Schmincke Aero Color 
Base: Wallboard, 

50x60cnn 


Stefan RosI: Night Bro 

Airbrush: Excalibur 3 Gun 
Paint: Lukas 
Base: Stretcher 



Marina Aschenbrenner: Pretty Girl 

Airbrush: Evolution 
Paint: Pro-Color 
www.airbrush-allgaeu.de 




READERS' GALLERY 




Frank Kochanski: New Art 
Airbrush: Badger Modell 100 GM 
Paint: Createx und Vallejo 
Base: Water color paper, 

A4 


Roland Kernhof: Refreshment 

Paint: Schmincke 
Base: Schoellers- 
hammer 4G, 70 x 50 cm 




Michel Mezzadri: 

Portrait of a famous Indian 

Airbrush: Paasche VLS 
Paint: Schmincke, Hansa 
Base: Wood 


Bernhard Sandner: Poodle 

Airbrush: Iwata HP-C 
Paint: Createx Classic 
Base: Jeansjacket 


03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


41 



STEP BY STEP | The Way of the Warrior 


Level 



THEWAm±Sl 
OF THE WARRIOR 


Once upon a time, airbrush artist Lies Maria motif. Of course, the head protector was also 
Wilhelm acquired an old, dark red motorcycle going to be given parts of the Japanese culture 
helmet from a passionate Honda driver. Since and naturally a wisp of that far eastern flair, 
the helmet was in desperate need of a live-cell According to the Samurai motto "Bushido", she 
therapy, so to speak, she turned it into her new moved out along the "Way of the Warrior"... 
project: It was to receive a Japanese Samurai 


42 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 



The Way of the Warrior | STEP BY STEP 


EQUIPMENT - The Way of the Warrior 


Airbrush: Evolution Silverline, 0.2 mm + 0.4 mm nozzle 

Paints: Molotow and Schmincke, reducer and line-marking 
paint from House of Kolor 

Additional materials: Masking tape, plotting foil, Molo- 
tow marker, various brushes, templates, rulers, scalpel. 


aquarelle pencils from Faber Castell, transparent, gra- 
phite, transfer, and copying paper, 3M tape, breath pro- 
tection masks, gloves, micro-fiber towel, silicon remover, 
various picture processing programs, printer, plotter 



I Material determination for the helmet 

I I Most helmets are made of thermo sets or thermoplastic materials 
with various material characteristics. For this reason, you should first test 
the solvent you'd like to use on an area that is as invisible as possible or at 
least not very noticeable, to assure that it is compatible. Materials that are 
enhanced with glass fibers, so-called GRP or even glass fiber helmet shells are 
insensitive vis-a-vis solvents as well as weathering and old age. Helmet that 
are produced via injection molding consist of thermoplastic synthetics, 
e.g. polycarbonate, polyamide or ABS (Acrylic Butadiene Styrene). What's 
most important for the airbrusher here is: Thermoplastic helmets eve not 
solvent-resistant and priming can have a long-term effect on essential material 
characteristics of the helmet. 



I Disassembly 

I All of the moveable small parts 
of the helmet, that is, visor and visor 
mechanics, shield, chin strap, interior 
upholstery, etc. can usually be removed 
or detached. For this, it is necessary to 
learn a bit about the topic. After all, 
you'll need to be able to reattach all of 
the parts after spraying, which is usually 
more difficult than disassembling them. 
Based on the various manufacturers and 
with that, the related number of indi- 
vidual and available replacement parts, 
it is basically impossible, a generally 
applicable instruction for to give the 
disassembly of a helmet. 



I Whetting and degreasing 

^/Jllhe most unpleasant and yet important work in custom painting is 
the whetting and degreasing. You usually make use of sanding paste for sand- 
ing. Preferably one that is suitable for delicate small parts with lots of curves, 
or 1000/1200 grid whetting paper. The more even the surface is whetted, the 
more beautiful the total result will be. If - as is the case with this helmet - 
a varnish has to be used in addition to paints on acrylic basis, all of the var- 
nished surfaces need to be sanded on again before you continue. For degreas- 
ing, I've made use of silicon remover and have removed all stickers and all glued 
on elements. For cleaning this, I recommend an anti-static micro fiber towel, 
because when using a common towel, the surface of the helmet will gain some 
static shock when rubbing it over, always drawing particles of dirt to it. 


03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


43 









STEP BY STEP | The Way of the Warrior 


f\A I Design establishment 

w^T I For the total design of the hel- 
met, I orientate myself roughly on the 
searched for topic (in this case, thus the 
"Samurai") and collect picture material 
and ideas that Til later possibly make 
use of. In a picture processing pro- 
gram, I first design all of the perspec- 
tive views of the helmet (view from the 
top, from the rear, from the sides). This 
type of processing makes it possible for 
me to try out various style elements in 
different combinations as well as from 
motifs to color schemes up to typog- 
raphy. I then plan all of the following 
work steps precisely. This is required 
in an interlocking design, since the se- 
quence of the work steps does not al- 
low for any "turning around" without 
destroying work that has already been 
done. Many custom painters also de- 
cide to protect already sprayed areas 
with an intermediate coating in order 
to remove or scrape away possible er- 
rors in the course of the work without 
damaging the layers below it. I did not 
have this possibility with this particular 
helmet. 




^ r I Bushido - the Way of the Warrior 

J I When researching the topic of "Samurai", you'll automatically encoun- 
ter "Bushido", which stands for the life philosophy and code of behavior of noble 
Japanese military units. For me it was very important to have the corresponding 
Chinese letters, which are part of Japanese writting in the form of "Kanji" and 
which literally stand for "Way (o) of the Warrior (Bushi)", flow into my design. 
The decorative graphic characters in black-and-white assume a majority of the 
helmet space in addition to the old Japanese military flag, which is also known 
as the flag of the rising sun. Thus, I could simply retain and make use of the red 
base color of the helmet for the elements of the flag. 



I gi'aphic characters and rays 

wWlAfter sanding and removing stuff, I taped up the entire helmet 
with masking tape and then drawn the graphic characters and the rays of the 
rising sun on it. I decided to brush all black areas with acrylic airbrush paint 
from Schmincke. What was then required was a little practice and a lot of fine 
instinctive feeling, because with a very sharp scalpel, I carefully cut out all of 
the black surfaces without scratching the subsurface, and took the tape off 
these spots. After applying black, I added some more thin layers for airbrush 
priming so as to protect the black surfaces from damages when continuing 
the work. Make sure to work 'dry', that is, place a lot of thin layers on top of 
each other. Once the paint runs, you'll be left with a very unclean total impres- 
sion. 


44 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 





The Way of the Warrior | STEP BY STEP 


I White surfaces I 

I Next all of the black sur- 
faces are covered up again with tape 
and the same procedure begins over 
again with the white surfaces. Tve 
sprayed these with a white line paint 
from House of Kolor, which unfort 
unately contains solvent but already 
covers very well in thin layers. The 
use of solvent-containing paints is ex- 
tremely hazardous to health, but un- 
der consideration of all warnings and 
usage instructions, it can most certain- 
ly be made use of. I use this paint in 
a well-ventilated area and use a breathing mask, gloves, and protective glasses. 
The line paint is diluted with a suitable reducer, also from House of Kolor, which 
I have mixed in an app. 2-to-1 ratio so as to allow the line color to be sprayable. 
Although my gun does have a solventresistant centerpiece, I cleaned it thoroughly 
afterwards so as to gain the full function of the seals. After the white paint layer 
has dried, I make use of an ultrafine sanding pad to roughen up the areas. Only 
after using that, I was able to completely remove the tape. The layer of varnish still 
needs to dry for a day. In this period of time, gas-forming elements also evaporate, 
which otherwise could lead to a situation where the adhesive on the tape connects 
itself with these, remains on the helmet, and thus, is difficult to remove. Before 
continuing, I once again clean everything with silicon remover and spray on a thin 
layer of primer in order to protect the previous result from scratches. 





I Do\o Master 

^/^JlThe portrait of the old wise battle master was not easy. Especially 
the wrinkles of the faces, but also the hair, eyelashes, and skin structure are 
difficult to spray with the airbrush. Even the correct shades of color, especial- 
ly the natural skin color and its shadings, are not easy to get right. I mix my 
colors during my work according to my gut feeling. In order to hit just the 
right nuances the next day, I create color and paint tables which detail the 
actually applied mixture relationships. The skin color is mixed out of magenta, 
yellow and neutral gray. Depending on the complexion, you can also mix in a 
little umber, Siena, red, black, and white. To begin, Tve established a large-size, 
wide-reaching skin color surface and transferred the portrait onto it with 
graphite paper, which isn't so easy due to the rounded surface. Afterwards. 
After that, you seal everything with a thin layer of medium. The pre- 
drawing created by this must be corrected in individual areas. 




OOl characteristics 

I I have now used neutral gray 
and umber to spray the cracks of the 
eyes, nose, mouth, eyebrows, fore- 
head and mouth cracks. With a some- 
what redder tone, I worked carefully 
through the face from wrinkle to wrin- 
kle, for erasing is not possible on this 
subsurface. 


03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


45 



STEP BY STEP | The Way of the Warrior 



1 0 I ^'9^^ edges and details 

I I With a light yellowish toned up white, I then go about roughly spray- 
ing the lighted edges of the faces. At this point, the dojo master looks as if he 
had too much white powder in his face and as such, I overspray everything with 
the same skin color that I used to begin the priming. I draw in the eyebrows and 
small wrinkles with the aquarelle pencils. 





^ ^ I The Samurai's mask 

I I I The face mask (Menpo) and the protective helmet (Kabuto) belong to 
a traditional Japanese set of equipment. They look very artistic and decorative 
although they are primarily intended for battle purposes and for protecting the 
soldiers. To prevent that the soldier could be injured in the face by sword tips, 
arrows, and spearing, the Samurais wore a mask made of metal, which usually 
presented a demonic looking grimace and was actually decorated with real glued 
on beard hair or visible teeth. I began by masking everything other than the sur- 
face of the face mask and then got busy giving it some structure. The application 
of paint with the airbrush is very flat, which leaves an unnatural impression with 
lots of surfaces. That's why I gave the surface of the mask a scarlet and chimney 
red priming with a sponge with which I added a dab of neutral gray. 


46 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 




The Way of the Warrior | STEP BY STEP 



^ ^ I Face and decorations 

I I With a second sponge, I dab 
on airbrush cleanser and then careful- 
ly take off loosened paint with a pi- 
ece of paper towel and some wiping. 
After that, I spray with some fine dark 
read and neutral gray onto the mask 
with a toothbrush. Now Tve a good 
a really nice "used" look and can 
continue with the masking details, 
which I have transferred again with 
graphite paper. To have the eyes and 
mouth cracks looking deep and dark, 
Tve used a tone of paint here that 
Tve mixed out of black and ultra- 
marine blue. For the sharp contours, 
I use some loose masking, which Tve 
made out of copy paper. I also spray 
on the very deep shadows under 
the helmet screen black. Tve establis- 
hed the remaining artistically deve- 
loped decorations of the mask with 
neutral gray. For the final touch, I use 
a supra white color to establish the 
lighted edges and reflections. 



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STEP BY STEP | The Way of the Warrior 


1 *3 I Decorative element 

I J I For prosperous soldiers, the helmet encasing was usually forged with 
hardened sheet metal or steel, but leather and cotton were also made use of. 
In addition, many details of the helmet were adorned with e.g. bright pearls 
and embroidery. In the reference chose, you can see some elaborately designed 
decorative elements made of copper such as the metal disc with the snake 
motif. 


1 A 1 effect 

I I The realistic presentation of metallic surfaces can be achieved in 
only but a few flicks of the hand. Glimmering surfaces are primarily made of 
highlights and many light/dark layers of the respective color hues. If you look 
closely at a metallic object, you first notice the highlights. If these highlights 
are not light enough or not placed in a precise enough position, this can have 
a strong effect on the total impression of the work. In addition to a very light 
reflection, you'll most often find a darker shadow. Many different shadings 
help against a too flat looking surface. The various color shades are dependent 
upon the type of metal. For gold, you'll more likely find yellow-ochre to green 
hues. For silver, there are more black and white shades. For copper - like in this 
case - you find more brown, red, and orange shades. 


©SUPER-TIP! 


^ r I A good tip for determining the light-dark contrasts is to transform 
I ^ I the reference into a black-and-white picture. This is made quickly 
possible with picture processing programs. 





Light reflexes 
and details 


The light reflexes are very visible on 
the edges of the decorations. For very 
small copper metal items, you can- 
not see any mirroring of the near vi- 
cinity, because the surface is more 
likely matt. Individual white light re- 
flexes have been drawn in with white 
aquarelle paint and a fine brush. Also 
with very sharp edges, for which I 
have used a dark-brown aquarelle 
pencil. I often use aquarelle pencils 
to draw in details. I've also drawn in 
the grooves that go vertically down- 
wards on the helmet with white and 
dark brown pencils. If you make a 
mistake while drawing, that can all 
be easily removed with a good bit of 
water. All that drawing is only per- 
manent when you've added a layer 
of primer. I now use brushes and 
aquarelle paints to paint on the deco- 
rative stones and embroidered seams. 
With the gun, I only need to spray on 
the shading. 



48 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 







The Way of the Warrior | STEP BY STEP 



^ ^ I Horns 

I # I The protective helmet kind 
of looks like what is commonly worn 
by firefighters nowadays, because 
these have a similar form of neck pro- 
tection on the rear side. What do in- 
deed make it different are the horns, 
which either truly were made of ani- 
mal horns or from metal. They served 
as a decorative element. In this case, 
the horns feature a light red-brown 
color hue that looks a bit like ivory. I 
taped them up with masking tape and 
then carefully cut the form with the 
scalpel. The shadows that the horns 
cast on the helmet have been estab- 
lished with neutral gray and sprayed 
on per freehand to establish a plastic 
effect. 




I The floral Ornament 

I In Japanese folk art, you will 
often see cherry blossoms (Sakura) 
in all variations. They belong to the 
most important symbols in the Japa- 
nese culture and represent beauty 
and awakening. Something special 
for Samurais was that they were 
a symbol for the perishability. The 
cherry blossom was sung about and 
praised in the last century in countless 
poems and songs and is an often used 
stylistic device in stories and movies. 
In the course of my online research 


when beginning to figure out the de- 
sign, I found a number of similar pat- 
terns and wanted to bring them into 
the draft. In one assortment of Asian 
vector graphics, I finally discovered 
something good. The template that I 
sought out consists of a line pattern 
that reminds one of a child's draw- 
ing, which I have then drawn on in 
a simplified version with bright mark- 
ers from Molotow. Beforehand, I drew 
the blossom formations very thinly 
with aquarelle pencils and separated 
the spots where I'd later like to place 


my artist signature. Molotow markers 
are very good and opaque for these 
purposes and are easy to use and hold 
in your hand. There are various inten- 
sities and colors. I use a white marker 
on the black side of the helmet and 
paint over it in a second wave with 
a red color from Molotow, which I 
have filled into an empty pin. I then 
overspray everything once again 
with several thin layers of priming in 
order to affix everything. 



03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


49 






STEP BY STEP | The Way of the Warrior 



1 Q I artist signature 

I ^ I Tve thought of a certain symbol for the design of the helmet so 
as to sign my work (on the one hand) and to also give it a certain recognition 
value (on the other hand). I decided to use a word/image logo that is com- 
posed of a variation of my first and last names and which contains graphic 
elements that I felt like incorporating. In this case, I have typographi- 
cally established the signature. For the application, I made use of a font, 
which optically appears a good bit like the Japanese syllabary "Katakana". 
Like what manufacturers use to sign motorcycle helmets, Tve placed this 
logo on the various parts of the helmet in various sizes as a piece of the total 
design. 


fc^/llo conclude, I submitted the 
helmet to the varnishing shop of my 
choice already provided with a double 
layer of varnish, before the parts that 
were removed beforehand, for exam- 
ple, the visor, were reattached and the 
former "old piece" is now shining in a 
new glory. 



Tank in the 03/14 issue. She had al- 
ready discovered her interest for art 
and painting at a very young age. In 
addition to her graphic works, she 
also created a number of oil paint- 
ings before she started devoting most 
of her time to airbrushing in 2009. 
Since then, she just hasn't been able 
to put down the "gun", as she says. 
Since absolving an airbrush major at 
the IBKK school in Bochum, Germany, 
she has continued to place a good bit 
of effort into becoming independent 
in this field of art and work, and is 
active as a freelancer airbrusher un- 
der the label name "Brush'n Roll". 

Q www.brushnroll.de 



50 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 





Level ■□□□□ 


Roger Hassler's Texture Effects Part 4 | STEP BY STEP //////A 



There are many different ways to simulate wa- 
ter drops. These are dependent on the surface 
and motif. I'll be showing you a simple mask- 
ing technique variation here, which can be very 


flexibly and easily built into various designs and 
illustrations or can be just placed on objects and 
allowed to take their given effect. 




01 


Background color 

To begin, create the background. It can be an illustration or, like in my 
example, simply an interesting, but simple, surface with texture. I spray on my 
complete surface with an opaque light blue. 


02 


Structure 

Beginning with blue, then 
with white, I sprinkle a whole bunch 
of small dots onto the blue surface to 
create a lovely structure. For this, I use 
the hose-bending method, in which 
the hose is simultaneously pressed to- 
gether and the trigger is quickly pulled 
down and to the rear (with a double- 
action unit). 


03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


51 




'/////// STEP BY STEP | Roger Hassler's Texture Effects Part 4 


I Draw the drops first 

J I Attach the masking film and 
draw on various drop sizes with a pen. 
What is ideal is a permanent felt tip 
pen, a soft pencil or a pen. 



f\A I Cut out the masking 

I Are you satisfied with the 
shape of the water drops, then cut 
them out very carefully. Pay attention 
not to throw away the interior area of 
the masking, since this will be required 
at a later juncture. 



^ |r I Shadowy side 

J I Mix together a lightly trans- 
parent black and spray it on the up- 
per interior side of the drop form. The 
pointed structure should still through 
a bit. To show you the effect here, 
Tve taken off the masking film in the 
meantime. When working though, you 
should definitely leave it on and then 
move on to the next step. 




I Light side 

I Now spray the lower side of 
the drop formations with an opaque 
white. Let everything dry well before 
you remove the complete masking. 




52 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 




Roger Hassler's Texture Effects Part 4 | STEP BY STEP //////A 


I Masking the drop shadow 

# I As the next thing, attach another piece of masking film over the drops and 
then draw a half-moon shaped crescent for the drop shadow, which you will then 
cut out afterwards. 






Spraying the 
drop shadow 


Now carefully spray transparent black 
along the interior contour such that a 
shadow is established. Afterwards, you 
can carefully remove the masking. 


OQ I corrections 

^ I If something might have gone wrong along the way, you can correct these 
possible masking errors with a fine brush. With opaque white, spray a highlight 
into the upper region of the drop shape - finished! Get inspired by the wetted 
bathtub rim, shower or window to try out other drop formations. As always, here's 
wishing you a boatload of fun with your water drop works! 



In the next issue: Stars 

y 


r j 

f 

Roger Hassler’s 


latlilitHiHilW 



03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


53 






//Residence: 

I come from Kerala in India and I now live in Mumbai. 

//This is how I became an airbrush artist: 

After I completed my schooling in Kerala, an exotic and 
beautiful place located between landscapes and rivers in In- 
dia, I moved to Mumbai to find a better job. Mumbai is the 
financial capital of India. My career began as a freelance 
textile artist and in 2002, I opened my own textile-airbrush- 
ing studio. I accept orders for pictures and also brush fine 
shirts and T-shirts for some of India's leading clothing manu- 
facturers. 

//This is what I most like to paint: 

I usually work on canvas. I most enjoy painting the faces of 
women, complex patterns, flowers, light and shadow, which 
I bring together in my pictures. The portraits of women are 
black-white, and melt into the color hues of the background. 


54 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/15 E 




Pradeesh Raman | PORTFOLIO 



The colors are soft, but shine nonetheless from the canvas. 
The fine shading offers a contrast between the people and 
the background. 

//What inspires me: 

There are many things that inspire me such as nature, peo- 
ple, photographs, and paintings. People who inspire me are 
my friends, family, and great photographers and artists. 

//My best ideas come when... 

... I read a book, do research online, watch a movie or when 
I see a white canvas. 


//You can see my artwork here: 

My artwork can be seen on some of the leading online 
galleries e.g. www.saatchiart.com/peadeesh. k.raman or 
www.indianartcollectors.com/artist/PradeeshK. or naturally 
at my Facebook page: www.facebook.com/pradeeshraman. 

//Something I'm particularly proud of is: 

I am always proud when I have the opportunity to exhib- 
it my airbrush work in art galleries together with leading 
contemporary artists from India. This is especially the case, 
because the airbrush technique is not very popular in the 
contemporary art scene here in India. 


//My current projects are... 

I am currently working on my solo exhibition in India. The 
topic is "Lord Buddha". I've created all my works with an 
airbrush, with a number of single-colored motifs being 
done in black or gray as well as highlights in white, red, 
orange, and yellows. The title of the exhibition is "Divine 
Light". 


//My future projects will be: 

For the future, I plan on starting up a portrait series with 
the most well-known personalities in India. The pictures will 
be created with the airbrush, black and white, in a large 
format, i.e. 150 x 150 cm (60 x 60 inches). I've got more than 
30 works swimming around in my head and would^ 
very much like to exhibit them next year. 



03/15 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


55 






STEP BY STEP | The Ferryman 


Level 


56 AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/1 5 E 


It was originally a boat with which the ferryman step by step, she takes us through the establish- 
Charon would bring the dead into the beyond ment of her work from the sketch on out and 
according to Greek mythology. In the interpreta- proves that artists are very much allowed to go 
tion of this by illustrator Sarah Richter, this task above and beyond the borders of reality... 
is assumed by a hellish dragon chopper. In this 


niagnets. 





'/////// STEP BY STEP | The Ferryman 


I The sketch 

I I For some time now, Tve want- 
ed to do something with the myth 
about the ferryman Charon, who would 
take the dead across the Styx and into 
the realm of the underworld, and I 
wanted to make him in a somewhat 
transformed manner on paper. After 
some scribbling around, I manage to 
develop this sketch of the ferryman, 
who sails souls into Hades as a skeleton- 
like sissy bar on a monstrous chopper. 
I transfer the sketch as thinly as possible 
per freehand onto my drawing board. 
It'd be best if you use a mechanical pen- 
cil for this (lead B). 




I Background on 
I the computer 


I now scan the sketch (photographing it 
works as well) and design a background 
using Photoshop. I print out the sketch 
that is generated on the computer in an 
A4 format so as to have it ready for use 
right away and to be able to orientate 
myself on it whenever Td like while I'm 
brushing. Since I will be brushing the 
background with glazing paints, I do 
not draw it, since the pencil lines would 
shine through. 



I Background on cardboard 

I On my drawing board, I start 
up right away with the color-intensive 
background. With a thinned basic yel- 
low, I fool around with the background 
formations. I do the same thing with 
Siena. I mix yellow and magenta in a 
1:1 ratio and get a lovely red, which is 
diluted. I use this to roughly establish 
the darker areas. Here you can also see 
the advantage of glazing paints: The 
figures shine through the paint and I 
don't need to retrace my sketch once 
the background is complete. 



58 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/1 5 E 




The Ferryman | STEP BY STEP //////A 



I Depth and structure 

^/^TMn this step, the individual 
foggy patches and cloud forms are 
more precisely developed with Siena, 
yellow and magenta, depending on 
which color mixture best corresponds 
to my background sketch. The paints 
are always thinned out with distilled 
water. With a sponge and thinned Sie- 
na, I give the picture some structure on 
the sides. In order to get more depth 
and diversity in the structure, I do the 
same with the yellow and magenta 
mixed red and then that same red, but 
darkened with some black. 



I Darkening 

J I When I brush with glazing 
paints, I always work from the lighter 
to the darker areas. Here you can re- 
ally see that I now arrive in the dark- 
er areas in the background. For that I 
mix a banging red out of yellow and 
magenta, darken it up with black and 
then thin it again with water. For some 
areas, I leave out the yellow and only 
darken the magenta or mix Siena and 
magenta with black. After this step, 
the background is almost finished and 
now I can turn to the figures in the 
foreground. 



w w I For the next few steps, I can set 
down the airbrush for a while and make 
use of the paintbrush. I place my basic 
colors of supra white, black, basic yellow, 
basic magenta and Siena into separate 
containers on my mixing slab and get my- 
self a cup of water for later use. Since I 
don't have any specific color guideline or 
template for the ferryman or the motor- 
cycle and passenger, I give some thought 
to what it should end up looking like and 
begin to do some mixing on the palette. 
I apply the first lines of color, see how 
they look, and then mix the paint for the 
next color tints. It looks chaotic, but with 
that, I am much freer and can work more 
quickly, but don't have to delimit myself 
from a color standpoint and by continu- 
ally re-mixing, have discovered various 
color shadings much like in nature. 


03/1 5 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


59 




'/////// STEP BY STEP | The Ferryman 


I The Ferryman 

w # 1 1 take a thin brush and be- 
gin working on the lantern, which 
will later be largely responsible for 
the light-shadow design of the ferry- 
man. As described above, Tve got my 
initial paints ready in the mixing slab 
and work again from the lighter to 
the darker areas. For the interior part 
of the lantern, I predominantly make 
use of the yellow and supra white, 
then use magenta, Siena, and black for 
the outer area. The greater the con- 
trast is, the more the lantern serves 
as an attention getter. The lantern is 
a small, but strong light source and 
that's why the light-shade contrast 
of the ferryman is very high - similar 
to if we'd hold a flashlight under our 
face while in darkness. The gnarly and 
skeleton-like structures allow for more 
possibilities to work on this contrast. 
The procedure is the same as with the 
lantern. For the lighter areas facing 
the light, I use white and yellow 
and for the areas in the shade, I use 
magenta, black and Siena in diverse 




combinations. By mixing the paints 
with supra white, they become more 
opaque and less brilliant. That's why 


it's possible that I mix this in with dark- 
er paints as well. 


OQ I Wheels and lever wings 

I We've now finished a major- 
ity of the ferryman. Up to now, I have 
used a thin brush. For the wheels and 
the lever wings of the choppers, I par- 
tially use a somewhat thicker brush. 
The rear lever wing is widely removed 
from the light and covered by fog 
patches. For this reason, I try to draw 
schemes that have as little contrast as 
possible without hard edges, based on 
opaque and dark paints. The color re- 
ceptors in our eyes are light-sensitive 
and the less light hits the objects, the 
more colorless they appear. I've given 
the lower region of the ferryman a 
darker design with a mixture out of Si- 
ena, magenta, black, and some supra- 
white, since it lies in the shade of the 
woman and, primarily, on the side that 
is turned away from the light. You can 
use the brush to lighten and loosen up 
the branches and skeleton of the fer- 
ryman at some spots by painting thin 
lines on the exterior sides that flow 
out in the background or build a loop, 
much like with the hair that is flow- 
ing in the wind. Since the frontal le- 
ver wing is closer to the viewer and is 
not covered by fog patches, it has to 
be clearly more detailed and richer in 




contrast than the rear lever wing. With 
diluted Siena and yellow, I dab some 
structure into the lever wing with the 
sponge. The shady areas are created 


with magenta, Siena and black. At this 
point, I now draw the motor and ex- 
haust pipe technicalities. 


60 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/1 5 E 





O O I freedom 

^/^Ipor the motorcycle experts amongst you, you may have already 
noticed in the sketch that the motor of my chopper is technically doomed 
to fail. Some colleagues pointed out my technical lapse after I had uploaded 
a picture of my sketch in an airbrush forum. I then used the computer to try 
and find as simple a solution as possible to allow the bend to be placed at the 
top of the cylinder (thanks once again to the forum community for the tip). 
This picture was one of the possible variations. Finally, I decided to do a larger 
alteration to make the exhaust pipe more interesting. 



1 0 I tank 

I I With the frontal lever wing, I wasn't sure how exactly I would design 
things. That's why I went about doing the other areas of the picture and only 
slowly kept working on the lever wing. To give the dragon chopper some 
life. I've decided to have a fierce, glowing tank. I'll also have the motor and 
exhaust pipe glowing hot a bit later. I mean, what would a trip to hell be 
without flames, right? I prime the whole tank using one of the thin brushes 
and pure, non-diluted yellow, which I touch up a bit on the sides with some 
Siena and magenta so as to create plasticity. 




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'/////// STEP BY STEP | The Ferryman 


^ ^ I Chopper skeleton 

I I I The tank is now finished. For 
the spine and ribs of the dragon, Tve 
primarily made use of Siena, magenta, 
and black. Thanks to the shine of the 
lantern, the skeleton is lit up from the 
upper right. For these areas, I mix yel- 
low, Siena, and Supra-white and then 
paint thin stripes onto the upper right 
ribcage area and spine. This leads to 
a somewhat rawer structure and plas- 
ticity. Tve also done a bit on the lever 
wing. For more details, Tve added some 
thin veins with mixed red. 



^ I Fork & dragon head 

m^Lllhe fork of the motorcycle 
should glow a little so that it looks 
like it would be getting heated up by 
the breath of the dragon. Since the 
fork is only heated from one side, it 
is naturally going to be colder on the 
other side. That's why I mix yellow 
and white for the areas on the dragon 
skull and place contrasts with that 
hard red. For the areas near the 
wheel, I use magenta, Siena, and black 
and keep everything as dark as possi- 
ble and with as little contrast as pos- 
sible. The splashguard and the dragon 
skull are spots, on which I slowly and 
carefully get to with color. The fron- 
tal wheel is located in the fog and 
that's why I brush over it again with 
a thinned magenta-Siena mixture. The 
dragon skull is illuminated by a diffuse 
light source in the fog. The lantern has 
a larger influence on the horns. 




1 *3 1 

I J I I've also finished the lever wing and the ferryman's oar. Just like with 
all areas of shade, I use some mixture of magenta, Siena, and black. I also pick up 
the airbrush again. The rear part of the chopper is hanging in the air a bit, thus 
I'll shortly brush on some fog patches with diluted supra white so that the bike is 
inserted more harmonically into the picture. With the exhaust pipe, I continue on 
in a manner that is more similar to fork, but this time the motor is the source of 
heat. Here you just have to think that the exhaust pipe is hollow and thus, it'll be 
hotter on the inside than outside. There will be some glowing coming out of the 
holes in the rear. 



The Ferryman | STEP BY STEP 


/ 



1 /L I woman 

I I I prime the woman with the 
airbrush and diluted Siena. I then mix 
a light rose pink tone out of supra- 
white, magenta, and some yellow, 
thin this mixture, and add it to the 
spots that shed light on the lantern. A 
bit of the paint lands on the ferryman. 
This is not so bad, because I can sim- 
ply erase away or paint over the color 
dust. Then I give the woman a bit of 
clothing, for which Tve used the thin 
brush and supra white. As soon as the 
clothing is finished, I brush diluted 
Siena over the areas not facing the 
light to darken the white there. For 
the hair, Tve used supra white, yellow, 
and magenta and paint along the 
individual strains. 



^ IC I Details & finish 

I J I We've finally reached the last 
step and a lot has happened. The mo- 
tor block area is really shining now 
and I add in some details with the brush 
such as e.g. the jungle of wires and 
some spider webs in the front region 
of the chopper. Just sign it now and the 
good piece of work is finished. 



SARAH RICHTER 


Sarah Richter was born in 1988 in Halberstadt (Germany) and has been drawing since she 
was a child. After her schooling in 2007, she decided to participate in a Graphic Design 
course in Halle and has been working as a graphic designer since 2009. Since 2011, she has 
also been working on a freelance basis as an illustrator and likes to apply more traditional 
techniques rather than working with the computer. She discovered airbrushing in 2007 
and immediately purchased a set of equipment. Airbrushing is something that she's pretty 
much taught herself. And she most enjoys combining it with other methods. 

Q www.5arahrichter.daportfolio.com 


03/1 5 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


63 





International Airbrush Days 2015: 

80 Pros and Hobby Artists from 14 Nations 

That was quite an event! After approximately a year and a half 
of planning, roughly 80 airbrush pros and hobby artists from 14 
countries met up from May 1 st- 3 rd at the International Airbrush 
Days in Hamburg. The unique workshop event offered a program 
consisting of over 40 seminars and presentations, from which the 
participants could select right there on site. Already a good half 
hour before entry, a long line formed on the first day of the event 
right up to the doors of the Arcotel Rubin. Over 60 participants 
had their ticket in their hand and waited to see their "stars". In- 
side, they were surprised by top artists Craig Fraser, Dru Blair, Gerald 
Mendez, Simon Murray, Ingo Korner, and Georg Huber, with whom 
the participants spoke and discussed things even before the first 
workshops, allowing everyone to get into the swing of things right 
off the bat. After an opening speech from ASBS Chief Editor Roger 
Hassler and his wife and colleague Katja Hassler, the first four hour 
workshops and two-hour demos began, led by the six main lecturers. 
In addition, Heidi Christensen from Denmark provided a beginners 
workshop for even the newest of airbrushers could get up and going 
for the next two days. 







Events | SCENE 




On the second and third days of the 
event the seminars held by the pro 
teams were enhanced by a few lo- 
cal experts. Varnishing expert Holger 
"Candyman" Schmidt shared his know- 
ledge about effect paints, Uwe Scheu- 
ten taught the participants T-shirt 
airbrushing, lawyer Peter Gabbler in- 
formed everyone about copyrights, 
photographer Claus Dopelheuer 
took a look at professional photog- 
raphy and Steek, the one and only 
bodypainting artist all the way from 
the Caribbean, whipped up an impres- 
sive piece of body artwork in no time 
flat. Despite the many thoroughly in- 
teresting topics, the highlights of the 
weekend certainly were the stars from 
across the ocean as well as their Ger- 
man colleagues. The "battle" for the 
respective 18 spots in the workshops 
fortunately remained very peaceful, as 
many participants were very satisfied 
just watching from the sidelines at the 
workshops and demos. 

Inquisitively, the participants asked a 
whole lot of questions and used every 
opportunity to get a photo with their 
favorite artist. The sponsor team from 
Iwata and Createx was also very hap- 
py about the interest in airbrushes, 
compressors, paints, templates, and 
accessories, which could be purchased 
on-site in the event store. As such, it 
was a huge honor for the organiza- 
tion team that not only the Euro- 
pean Iwata representatives from Italy 
and Germany were there, but also 
that the product developer and for- 
mer CEO of Iwata Medea USA, Will 


03/1 5 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


65 



SCENE I Events 


Naemura, made the trip to Hamburg. 
There was a disappointing setback 
for all involved through very short- 
notice cancellations by Fitto and Steve 
Driscoll. For health reasons, Fitto had 
to cancel his journey to Germany just 
two days before the event while Steve 
Driscoll simply didn't show up at the 
airport, leaving the organization team 
simply waiting empty-handed with- 
out a word at the airport. Thanks to 
the very professional and creative 
work of the other artists and helpers, 
it was possible to fill the few holes in 
the event plan within but a few hours 
such that the participants didn't have 
to miss anything. 

Participants, lecturers, the team, and 
sponsors alike were just ecstatic about 
the event and thus, one glaring ques- 
tion seemed to loom over everyone: 
When will the next International Air- 
brush Days be held? One thing is for 
certain and that is that it will definitely 
take place again. When and where - 
that's something you'll find out in good 
time right here in this magazine... 






Events | SCENE 



Modell-Hobby-Spiel 2015: 

The Airbrush Exhibition goes on! 

The airbrushing exhibition at the Modell-Hobby-Spiel event in Leipzig, Ger- 
many, now features a new organizer and sponsor: The German Airbrush-Asso- 
ciation (Airbrush-Fachverband e.V.). Since mid-March, the airbrush exhibition 
has been scheduled to take place in the Glashalle under the supervision of the 
branch association. The Airbrush-Fachverband e.V. offers airbrushing artists, 
whether hobby artists or pros, exhibition spots in various sizes and price situa- 
tions. Members of the association profit from an extra discount and preferred 
selection. Planned is also an airbrush program with workshops, presentations, 
and consultation - much like had been the case in recent years in Hall 5. The 
Airbrush-Fachverband will assume the tasks formerly conducted by Brigitte 
Pluschke, who had run the airbrush exhibition 12 years long on an honorary 
basis. Thanks to her dedication, the Modell-Hobby-Spiel has established itself 
in Leipzig into one of the central meeting spots of the airbrushing scene. The 
first October weekend is always a fixed, planned date for many artists and 
airbrush fans. 

This year's Modell-Hobby-Spiel event will take place from October 2^^ to 
2015. Information and registration documents for the exhibitions can be 
downloaded from the official German Airbrush-Fachverband website. 

o www.airbrushfachverband.de/mhs.php 

WWW.modell-hobby-Spiel.de photos: Harald Rettkh and Jorg Warzyceck 


DO YOU SPEAK 

AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP! 

We are looking for partners to produce and distribute Airbrush Step by Step magazine 
in foreign language versions. Rights available for print or web, full or part issues. 




BRUSHING UP 
ON THE BASICS 


PORTRAT 

Morgan fWi 
in Stein iituM 


KAREL KOPIC 
From LP Covers to' 
Computer Gamesk 


CUSTOM PAINTIN^ 
BY FITTO 

Sensenmanner & Dimoisenl 


FIRE 

FLAMES 


NEUE SERIE; 
Special Effects 


MISCHTECHNIK 


Fireball • Miniature F4ot Rod 
Flamir >9 helmet lor Utoin toit 


SpruhdoveO'Mix von U»r« OKhata | AcrylmaFcrei von Georg Huber 
Schlagmetall im Custom Pamtirtg von Bernhard Laschober 

I V.lMi I »«tr | Oak* rei 4 


to 


KA 


£ 



Entrevista o 


TEZ MORLNA 
En retrato ^ 


GERALD MENdI^ 
llustracion dc Fant^^ 
con Pinturas Candj^ 


PINTURA KUSTOM & PINTURAS IPX 


t.«r«d.»u«9oileAUn r«»tr«M • d« Nartry con Ka)a 4m Oro 

•ortte CkUvera 4m arikar • Setrciet d« nfecloc d# Oiftlura *Car»dynian* 


CONTACT US: editor@airbrush-magazine.net or +49 40 48501863 






'/////// SCEHE I Events 



Bodies & Beats: World Bodypainting Festival 2015 

The 18th World Bodypainting Festival is about to begin: Under the motto "The 
Fusion of Bodies & Beats", the bodypainting world will meet together from July 
3 ^^ through 5 ^^ at the Austrian Worther See. Artists from 45 countries will bat- 
tle it out during the three main days to become the World Champion for 
bodypainting in the categories of Airbrush, Brush/Sponge and Special 
Effects as well as Facepainting and UV Effects. Going above and beyond 
that, there'll be other awards for amateurs, in the field of make-up and 
installation art. The bodypainters are truly challenged as the topics will 
be "Games - People Play" and "Surrealism - Reshape your Reality". As far 
as the festival program is concerned, there'll be a lot going on like every year. 
Providing music will be US stars Sean Paul and Gentleman as well as 30 other 
bands and other DJs. Fashion, art, and artistry will be just as much a part of the 
fun as new funky swimming events at the beach pool next door and shopping 
at the lifestyle market held at "Bodypaint City". Already as of June 28^^^ the WB 
Academy will also be offering a comprehensive workshop program with the 
stars and pros in the scene. Entry to all three main days begins at 49 EUR. Day 
tickets are available depending on the day as of 19 EUR. 


Q www.bodypainting-festival.com 


Photos: World Bodypainting Festival 



Poland puts out International Airbrush Competition 

Airbrush'Lab is Poland's largest airbrush platform with news, tutorials, tests, 
and forums. This is where Polish airbrush pros, beginners, and hobby airbrush- 
ers meet to learn, discuss, and chat about all things airbrushing. Since 2011, the 
Airbrush'Lab has run a competition every year, making it international for the 
first time in 2014. This year, the contest will take place for the first time with 
an open concept, that is, there are no topical specifications or delimitations 
with respect to the surface or motif. Whoever would like to participate only 
need send a photo of his or her work to Mariusz Sadkowski (info@airbrushlab.pl) 
by the end of June. Belonging to the jury are well-known artists and industry 
representatives such as Marissa Oosterlee, Dru Blair, JW Baker, Jurek Zamoyski, 
Thomas OIczyk, "Airbrush Tutor" Mitch Lowther, ASBS Chief Editor Roger 
Hassler, and PANDKG magazine boss Lynda Johnson. 

o www.airbrushlab.pl 


68 


AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 03/1 5 E 



SHOPPING GUIDE 


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SFHIIWERKJIJ 

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MmnBK SM0P - Migsziiif - Anttr 


The online shop in Austria 
Unterfahrenbach 16 
8451 Heimschuh, Austria 
Phone +49 (0)664 2387220 
office@spritzwerk.at 
www.spritzwerk.at 


^(/?Lrl»nuikji(tri|> ^r^anmaik 


The No.1 airbrush webshop in Denmark. 
We supply the top products in Airbrush 
and pinstriping products. 

Iwata, Createx, One Shot, Kafka, 

Harder & Steenbeck, Sparmax etc. 

Peter Bruuns vej 55, 9210 Aalborg DK 
Phone: +45 42333367 
Mail: lnfo@airbrush-shop.dk 
www.airbrush-shop.dk 



Specialty store for all airbrushing products 
Repair + service 
Workshops and seminars 
Karntener Str. 30-32 
45659 Recklinghausen 
Phone +49 (0)2361 36035 
info@crazy-scoot.de 
www.crazy-scoot.de 



The Ultimate Online Shop - Where you 
find everything to Airbrush! Dealer for 
all products from Createx, Badger, Iwata, 
Werther, Vallejo, Ventus & Eulenspiegel 
Apartado 245 

8126-903 Quarteira, Portugal 
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Airbrush and Art Materials 
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Belgium 

Tel/Fax +32 (0)3 289 00 56 
info@obeeliks.com 


Anest Iwata Europe s.r.l. 


European Distributor of Iwata, 
Medea and Artool range of products, 
and painting spray equipments 
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101 55 Torino, Italy 
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Fax +39 (0)11 851944 
info@airbrush-iwata.com 
www.airbrush-iwata.com 



For all your Airbrush & Pinstripe products 
Dealer of House of Kolor, Iwata, One Shot etc. 
Store and online shop in Dutch and English 
Airbrush & Pinstripe workshops 
Smithweg 1.23, 4462HC Goes 
Phone +31 (0)11 3785147 
Fax +31 (0)65 4797785 
Lionart@zeelandnet.nl 
www.Lion-Art.nl 


The UK's Premier Supplier of Quality 
Airbrush Equipment. Stockists of Harder 
& Steenbeck and Sparmax Products 
Unit C5/C6, The Hailey Centre 
Holton Heath, Poole 
Dorset, UK, BH16 6LT 
Phone 01202 622579 
office@everythingairbrush.com 
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artobi 


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Phone 0032(0) 15556197 
Tuesday-Friday: 

10.00-12.30 and 13.30-18.00 
Saturday: 9.00-16.00 
artobi@scarlet.be 
www.artobi-airbrush.be 


TOSN^^. 

The no.1 in Belgium for all your 
Airbrush & Pinstriping materials. 

Online shop in Dutch, French and English. 
Toswos.be 

St-Ambrosiusstraat 53 0202 
9600 Ronse (Belgium) 

Phone +32 (0) 468 32 25 87 

info@toswos.be 

www.toswos.be 


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European Distributor for Createx 
Colors, Wicked Colors, Auto Air Colors, 
Airbrush supplies 
Kirch hoffstr. 7 

24568 Kaltenkirchen, Germany 
Phone +49 (0)4191 88277 
Fax +49(0)4191 85912 
info@createx.de 
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Fax +886.2.2345.3162 

lnfo@Sparmax.com.tw 

www.Sparmaxair.com 


03/1 5 E AIRBRUSH STEP BY STEP 


69 



















PREVIEW I Imprint 


Q IMPRINT 


newart medien & design 

Roger Hassler/Katja Hassler 

Wandsbeker Konigstr. 50 

22041 Hamburg 

Phone +49 40 48501863 

Fax +49 40 48501862 

Mail info@airbrush-magazin.de 

Web www.airbrush-magazin.de 

II www.facebook.com/airbrushstepbystep 


Editor in Chief: 

Roger Hassler (V.i.S.d.P.) 

Editorial: 

Katja Hassler 

Contributors: 

Ariel Castellaro, Lies Maria Wilhelm, 

Pradeesh Raman, Rob van Dijk, 

Sarah Richter, Diego Baubinas, 

Gerald Mendez 

Graphics: 

Roger Hassler, Patricia Peters 

Photos (where not quoted): 

Roger Hassler, Patricia Peters 
pressphotos of the producers and artists 

Translation: 

Chapin Landvogt 

Advertising & Marketing: 

Katja Hassler, anzeigen@airbrush-magazin.de 

Distribution: 

Diana Boge, vertrieb@newart.de 

Airbrush Step by Step is a quarterly pub- 
lication. Original version in German language 
is published with a circulation of 10.000 cop- 
ies. 

The publisher maintains the copyright for all 
published contributions. Uncredited articles 
do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the 
editorial staff. Reproduction of this publication 
in part or whole is allowed only with written 
permission from the publisher. Product names 
have been used without guarantee of their 
application. 

We claim no liability for unsolicited articles. 
Upon receipt of a contribution intended for 
publication, the author releases exclusive 
publishing rights to the publisher until the 
expiration of the copyright, unless otherwise 
agreed upon. This also includes the right to 
produce electronic versions and/or storage 
within a database, as well as duplication and 
distribution online and offline without addi- 
tional compensation. 

Authors and creators of texts sent in for pub- 
lication can be held liable for copyright in- 
fringement and breach of privacy laws. 


Coming up in the next 



Monkey Business 

A Portuguese artist living in Finland, 
Ari Huttunen de Carvalho, has sought 
out a friendly chap: His gorilla portrait 
requires a whole lot of dark paint and 
a lot of patience to fine tune the wrin- 
kly and hairy face in such an impres- 
sive manner. 



Requiem for a dream 

Jeroen van Neijhof loves the beauti- 
ful things that surround him. That's 
why he paints particularly beautiful 
women. The middle-aged fantasy por- 
trait contains hundreds of fine details, 
which allows you to discover new de- 
tails with every glance. 


issue: 



Miss Wet T-Shirt 

A lovely back.... The wet T-shirt simply 
leaves you guessing just how beauti- 
ful the young lady is. With paints, that 
are just as transparent, erasing and 
colored markers, Jaroslaw Bytow has 
put together a hot portrait. 



Happy Halloween! 

Better don't ask „Mr Snuggles" for 
„trick or treat"! US artist Chad Mahone 
created this nice fellow freehand and 
with a lot of texture techniques, such 
as stencils and Artool's effect spray 
„Killer Grunge FX"! 


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70 


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6) AIRBRUSH BODYPAINTING 

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© SORAYAMA AT HIS BEST 

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© AIRBRUSH ON ALL SURFACES 

In airbrush technique there are no limits in surface, form or 
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